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BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITYCOLLEGE OF FINE ARTS AND COMMUNICATIONS
School of Music presents
7:30 p.m.23 February 2019Madsen Recital HallHarris Fine Arts Center
Guest Artist Recital
Primrose Memorial Concert
Garth Knox, viola
P RO G R A M
Such Sweet Sorrow Rory Boyle b. 1951
Notturni Brillanti, no. 1 Salvatore Sciarrino b. 1947
A Bird Came Down the Walk Toru Takemitsu 1930–1996
7 Preludes from Op. 34 Dmitri Shostakovich 1906–1975 arr. E. Strachov
INTERMISSION
Viola Spaces Garth Knox Nine Fingers b. 1956 One Finger Up, Down, Sideways, Round
Garth Knox, viola Mary Eyre, viola
Madison Moline, viola Ethan Sherman, viola Madilynn Riley, viola
Marin Marais Variations Garth Knox b. 1956
Garth Knox, viola Claudine Bigelow, viola Madison Moline, viola Ethan Sherman, viola
This musical event is the 56th performance sponsored by the BYU School of Music for the 2018–2019 season.
This musical event is the 56th performance sponsored by the BYU School of Music for the 2018–2019 season.
Garth Knox was born in Ireland and spent his childhood in Scotland. Be-ing the youngest of four children who all played string instruments, he was encouraged to take up the viola and quickly decided to make this his career. He studied with Frederic Riddle at the Royal College of Music in London where he won several prizes for viola and for chamber music. Thereafter he played with most of the leading groups in London in a mixture of all reper-toires, from baroque to contemporary music.
In 1983 Knox was invited by Pierre Boulez to become a member of the Ensemble InterContemporain in Paris, which involved playing both solos (including concertos directed by Pierre Boulez) and chamber music, tour-ing widely, and performing in international festivals.
In 1990 Knox joined the Arditti String Quartet, which led him to play in all the major concert halls of the world, working closely with and giving first performances of pieces by most of today’s leading composers including Ligeti, Kurtag, Berio, Xenakis, Lachenmann, Cage, Feldman, and Stockhau-sen (the famous “Helicopter String Quartet”).
Since leaving the quartet in 1998 to concentrate on his solo career, he has given premieres by Ligeti, Schnittke, George Benjamin, and many others, including pieces which were written especially for him by composers like Henze, Haas, Saariaho, and James Dillon. He also collaborates regularly in theatre and dance projects and has written and performed a one-man show for children.
Knox has recently become a pioneer of the viola d’amore, exploring its pos-sibilities in new music (with and without electronics), and is in the process of creating a new repertoire for this instrument.
Knox now lives in Paris, where he enjoys a full-time solo career: giving recit-als and performing concertos and chamber music concerts all over Europe, the US, and Japan. He is also an active composer, and his Viola Spaces, the first phase of an on-going series of concert studies for strings (published in 2010 by Schott), combines ground-breaking innovation in string technique with joyous pleasure in the act of making music. The pieces have been ad-opted and performed by young string players all over the world.
Knox is a visiting professor of viola at the Royal Academy of Music in Lon-don.